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  1. Friedrich Wilhelm Karl Ernst Schröder (25 November 1841 in Mannheim, Grand Duchy of Baden – 16 June 1902 in Karlsruhe, Germany) was a German mathematician mainly known for his work on algebraic logic.

  2. Ernst Schröder was a German mathematician who did important work is in the area of algebra, set theory and logic. His work on ordered sets and ordinal numbers is fundamental to the subject. Skip to content

  3. Mar 2, 2009 · The German mathematician Ernst Schröder played a key role in the tradition of the algebra of logic. A good example was his challenge to Peirce to provide a proof of the distributive law, as one of the key equational properties of the algebras with two binary operations.

    • Stanley Burris, Javier Legris
    • 2009
  4. Nov 17, 2018 · Ernst Schröder Frege’s contributions were not immediately understood or appreciated, and in the closing decade of the century logic was dominated by the three volumes of Ernst Schröders Vorlesungen über die Algebra der Logik (1890–95).

  5. In metalogic: Satisfaction of a theory by a structure: finite and infinite models. …the late 19th-century German mathematician Ernst Schröder and in Löwenheim (in particular, in his paper of 1915).

  6. www.scientificlib.com › ErnstSchroederErnst Schröder

    Ernst Schröder (25 November 1841, Mannheim, Baden, Germany – 16 June 1902, Karlsruhe, Germany) was a German mathematician mainly known for his work on algebraic logic.

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  8. He studied there mathematics with Ludwig Otto Hesse (of 'Hesse nor-mal form' fame), physics with (Gustav) Robert Kirchoff, and chemistry with Robert Bunsen (of 'Bunsen burner' fame). Kirchoff is best known as the dis-coverer of spectral analysis—work undertaken with Bunsen.

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